Audio

George Kenny
George says there were things he liked in Residential School - like learning, but says there are the bad things that happened there too. He talks about wondering where this deep seated anger comes from and finding out about his sexual abuse in Residential Sch.
Survivors Toolkit: “Being assertive.” Part of being able to set your personal boundaries comes from knowing how to be assertive. Being assertive is knowing when to say “No” to people that want to drag you off to do what THEY want to do.

Richard Morris
Richard talks about how it is not only the Residential School that has negatively impacted our lives but more so with colonialism that came with contact. He describes how this happened. Very good show.
Survivors Toolkit: Have a hard time saying “no” to people and end up doing things you don’t want to do? Set personal boundaries and free yourself from the “disease to please”

Charles Boyce – Survivor – had a brown envelope pinned to jacket when he and his brother were sent without an adult to southern Ontario and had to change trains in Toronto and found their way through kindness of people.
Lyn Manitowabi – “Christmas preparation”

Georgina Williams – Survivor - MicMac born in jail to raped mother, ran away from jail at age 18 to begin life. Being lied to by priests and Nuns all her young adult life, Georgina had to relearn life after she escaped into the outside world and learn how to leave her old life behind through counseling.
Lyn Manitowabi – continuation of “nutrition”

Intergenerational Youth from DFC
Devon B. Meekis – talked about what he knows about res. School and what his parents told him, what he has learned about life, making mistakes and learning from them.
Joshua Chicago – talks about education, his family, growing up and what he learned from his parents.
Jenay Fiddler – talked briefly about her family, res. School and what she knows about it.
Todd Meekis – talked about his family problems, what he’s heard about res. School and what he learned from his mistakes.
Lyn Manitowabi – “nutrition”

Elder Ellen Beardy – mother of survivors – talked to us in her language about what she felt when her child was stolen while she and other parents cried for days when their children were taken away to residential school.
Elder Susie Jones – Survivor: Walpole Island – says they began working on their survivors and their community and non-aboriginal communities in outlying areas to bring understanding and peace to their region, won award from YMCA.
Lyn Manitowabi – our topic tonight is ‘Sleep’ and why it’s important.